The question shakes us all to our very souls.   For humans to consider the cloning of one  another forces them all to question the very concepts of right and wrong that make  them all human. The cloning of any species, whether they be human or non-human, is  ethically and morally wrong. Scientists and ethicists alike have debated the implications  of human and non-human cloning extensively since 1997 when scientists at the Roslin  Institute in Scotland produced Dolly. No direct conclusions have been drawn, but  compelling arguments state that cloning of both human and non-human species results  in harmful physical and psychological effects on both groups. The following issues  dealing with cloning and its ethical and moral implications will be addressed: cloning of  human beings would result in severe psychological effects in the cloned child, and that  the cloning of non-human species subjects them to unethical or moral treatment for  human needs.   The possible physical damage that could be done if human cloning became a reality is  obvious when one looks at the sheer loss of life that occurred before the birth of Dolly.  Less than ten percent of the initial transfers survive to be healthy creatures. There  were 277 trial implants of nuclei. Nineteen of those 277 were deemed healthy while the  others were discarded. Five of those nineteen survived, but four of them died within  ten days of birth of sever abnormalities. Dolly was the only one to survive (Fact: Adler  1996). If those nuclei were human, "the cellular body count would look like sheer  carnage" (Logic: Kluger 1997). Even Ian Wilmut, one of the scientists accredited with  the cloning phenomenon at the Roslin Institute agrees, "the more you interfere with  reproduction, the more danger there is of things going wrong" (Expert Opinion). The  psychological effects of cloning are less obvious, but none the less, very plausible. In  addition to physical harms, there! are worries ...